The word ecology derives from the Greek word οlκος (oikos, home, household). The German zoologist Ernst Haeckel coined the term in late nineteenth century in order to describe relations between animals and animals with their environment. Late nineteenth century was just as revolutionary as our time: the same aggression and thoughtlessness on all matters of the natural world.
This was a time when the footprint of humanity started crushing the world of animals and plants.
Northern Harrier in the rain - photo: Jeffrey St. Clair
The word ecology derives from the Greek word οlκος (oikos, home, household).
The German zoologist Ernst Haeckel coined the term in late nineteenth
century in order to describe relations between animals and animals with
their environment.
Late nineteenth century was just as revolutionary as our time: the same
aggression and thoughtlessness on all matters of the natural world.
This was a time when the footprint of humanity started crushing the world of
animals and plants. Industrialization was the new paradigm for “progress.”
Religious men, businessmen, politicians and academics wanted a piece of the
action: controlling nature was at the heart of this emerging machine
culture. Petroleum chemistry fueled the engines of production and
destruction.
Haeckel and some of his contemporary European scientists could see that
humans were ripping apart the delicate structures and relations in the
natural world. Like the climate scientists of the twenty-first century, they
thought that shining light on how nature works would enlighten the rulers
and lessen the human threat to the environment.
Aristotle
They modeled their science, including the new ecology, on ancient Greek
thought. Aristotle was especially insightful: he was the father of
biology-ecology.
Charles Darwin was touched by Aristotle. He kept trying to explain how life
began, but he faced persistent opposition from the millions of followers of
the one-god religions preaching the creation of the universe in seven days
and man’s unquestionable dominion over animals, plants and the Earth itself.
Darwin read in translation one of Aristotle’s zoological works, Parts of
Animals. He was stunned. He thanked William Ogle, the editor and translator
of the biological works of Aristotle. “I have rarely read anything which
interested me more,” Darwin wrote. “From quotations which I had seen I had a
high notion of Aristotle’s merits, but I had not the most remote notion what
a wonderful man he was. [Carl] Linnaeus and [Georges] Cuvier have been my
two gods, though in very different ways, but they were mere schoolboys to
old Aristotle.” (Darwin to Ogle, February 22, 1882 in Francis Darwin, ed.,
The Life and Letters of Charles Darwin, 2 Vols. (New York: Basic Books,
1959) II, 427.)
Linnaeus, 1707-1778, was a Swedish botanist and Cuvier, 1769-1832, was the
French father of modern comparative anatomy and paleontology They were
Darwin’s “gods.” They were, in fact, two of the greatest scientists of
Europe who had studied Aristotle.
Georges Cuvier had no doubt Aristotle was a benefactor of mankind and one of
the immortals. Cuvier had no doubt Aristotle, “the pupil of Plato,
discovered and demonstrated more truths and did more scientific work, in one
life of 62 years than 20 centuries after him.”
In addition, Cuvier said:
"We should consider Aristotle one of the greatest observers who ever lived. Without any doubt his genius for classifying was the most extraordinary ever produced by nature…. The great divisions and subdivisions of the animal kingdom by Aristotle are astonishingly precise. They have almost all resisted additions by science." (Georges Cuvier, Histoire des sciences naturelles, 5 vols (Paris: Fortin, Masson, 1841) I, 130-149, 432.)
Theophrastus
Theophrastus was a student of Aristotle who did for plants what his master
had done for animals. He became a great botanist and agronomist, explaining
the place of food crops in nature, including the role insects played in
farming. He suggested what farmers could do to get a good harvest. He
explained the diseases that the weather brought to trees and described the
diseases of pulses and cereals. Like Hippocrates, he clearly thought that
the influence of climate and soil on farming were decisive. He also reported
how vegetables fight insects and weeds. (Theophrastus, History of Plants
8.7.6-7; 2.2.7-12; 4.14.2-14; 7.5.4-6, ed. Kaktos Philological Team (Athens:
Kaktos, 1998).
These extraordinary scientific insights, following on the original
biological and ecological contributions of Aristotle, were some of the first
ecological principles and biological pest management observations in
history.
Theophrastus had a lasting influence among botanists, and students of the
natural world and farmers for several centuries.
The Roman writer, Pliny the Elder, reported in late first century that
farmers “have tried every possibility” in improving their trees. Grafting,
Pliny said, has been perfected. (Pliny, Natural HistoryXV.57, tr. John F.
Healy, London: Penguin Books, 1991.)
Ecology in the abstract
European and American scientists mined these ecological insights for
understanding and defending the natural world. They created ecological
academic disciplines and teaching. They said they focused on ecology,
bio-ecology, agro-ecology, environmental biology and environmental sciences
and environmental studies: all dealing with relations, from the molecular
level to species, to relations and connections of animals and plants in the
vast natural world and the impact of humans on the evolution, survival or
extinction of animals and plants.
Divine nature: ecological gods
What is missing in modern ecology is the reverence ancient people had for
the natural world. Peasants started their days with a respectful thought
about the land, the seed and the divinities in nature. They may have made an
offering in a rural altar. In contrast, our modern organic farmer using
agroecology still thinks in materialistic ways: soil, organic fertilizers,
insects, seeds, government regulations.
The Greeks, Chinese, Egyptians and other ancient people had imagined gods
being part of the cosmos and the natural world. Aristotle and Theophrastus
did their biological investigations at a time when Demeter, goddess of
wheat, was one of the most powerful and beloved deities in the Greek
pantheon. She was as close to being Earth as Earth itself. She was the
mother of all things agrarian. The Eleusinian Mysteries honored Demeter. It
was the greatest religious and agricultural celebration in Greece.
Dionysos, god of grape vines, wine, and rural life, was large in the life of
the peasants and city rulers. Athens had two annual celebrations of
Dionysos.
Athena, daughter of Zeus, goddess of wisdom, gifted the olive tree to Athens
that named itself after this divine being. Athenians, in addition, honored
Athena with the magnificent Parthenon, which they dedicated to Athena
Parthenos (Virgin Athena).
Pan was the god of flocks: domesticated animals. Artemis was the goddess of
wild animals and the natural world.
Aristaios, son of Apollo, was brought up by Gaia (Earth) and Horai
(goddesses of the seasons). He was god of healing, prophesy, honeybees,
beekeeping, shepherding, olive-growing, and cheesemaking.
These agricultural or ecological gods added an invisible and rarely spoken
duty of environmental protection among the Greeks. The respect and love
members of a family felt for each other metastasized to the broad and
beautiful expanses of olive groves, vineyards, wheat fields, rivers, lakes,
forests – the cosmos.
The paradigm of ecological civilization
I am not saying ancient Greeks were perfect or vegetarian. Despite
Pythagoras teaching against eating animals, the Greeks ate meat. But, in
very broad terms, the Greeks, like the Chinese, worked with ethical
traditions and politics infused with ecological wisdom. The idea of
willfully driving a species to extinction was alien to them.
We need to revive this ancient ecology and make it a glue of our culture,
transform it to ecological civilization. The Chinese have been trying to do
that.
And after Americans get rid of Trump, the country should join China in
establishing a global ecological civilization.
The sooner this happens, the better. In 2019, Ecological civilization
primarily means no more fossil fuels or pesticides and a rapid return to
organic family farming. Stopping eating meat would help enormously in
reducing the huge and deadly amounts of carbon and other greenhouse gases
climbing daily to the clouds. These giant transformations might tame the
monster of climate change – giving us more time for completing an ecological
world. We can then enjoy civilized living.
As part of this global transformation, I see no reason why Greece cannot
recall its ancient civilization. Millions of tourists visit the country
every year just to see the ruins of that civilization. Imagine the result of
a Hellenic culture with the temples of the gods back in their original
places, the Olympics, the Platonic Academy and, above all, Greece living the
principles of Hellas. The country could become the center of ecological
civilization in Europe: no more fossil fuels. The Sun god Helios could
provide the country’s energy. Greece, once again, becoming the model for
examined and good life graced with respect for the natural world that, in
reality, keeps us alive and thriving.
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